BUTTER

Verb transitive. Late Middle English.

[from BUTTERnoun.]

1 Spread with butter; cook or dish up with butter. LME

2 figurative.Flatter lavishly, Now usually followed by up. E18

My most enduring memory of George Orwell's Homage to Catalonia(as well as the predilection for ridiculous acronyms during the Spanish Civil War) was Orwell's account of a socialist fighter engaging in psychological warfare by shouting at his fascist counterparts across the enemy lines:

"'Buttered toast!' - you could hear his voice echoing across the lonely valley - 'We're just sitting down to buttered toast over here! Lovely slices of buttered toast!'"

Homage to Catalonia, Chapter 4

Of all the things that one could choose to shout - from political slogans to appeals not to fight against your fellow countrymen - this man chose to invoke and tempt the senses with thoughts of hot toast and butter, that most delicious and irresistible of staples. Orwell said he knew the man, who was shouting from further down his own line, was lying and like everyone else wouldn't have seen any hot toast and butter for months, but it still set his mouth watering on those long icy nights, and he was certain it was doing the same to the hungry fascists as well. You can just imagine the poor, conscripted sentries, shivering and hugging themselves in the freezing darkness, hunger gnawing at their insides, listening to some stranger's voice drifting through the void: "Buttered toast! We're just sitting down to buttered toast over here!" Mhmm. Could it possibly be true? "Lovely slices of buttered toast!"

Butter is such a basic and ancient foodstuff (it's thought likely the consumption of butter is even more ancient than that of liquid milk), and yet it's almost unparalleled in its seeming luxuriousness. Unsurprisingly, butter has become a central component in various English idioms and expressions. You can say that someone looks "as if butter wouldn't melt in his mouth," for example, meaning that they seem demure and innocent. You might also say someone has their "bread buttered on both sides," or they "want their bread buttered on both sides," or (if they know where their advantage is) they know "which side their bread is buttered on."